Australia Plus doesn’t add
Most nations strive
to show their best sides to the world through international TV channels. They see these as effective means of building
rapport and dispelling distrust.
On these
platforms they serve documentaries, dramas and newscasts made to enhance their
country’s real or imagined virtues. BBC World, France24, Al Jazeera, NHK (Japan),
Deutsche Welle and other telecasters offer vistas grand using serious
money.
The French
Government is reported to spend AUD$ 117 million a year on France 24 while Russia’s RT
channel is believed to have an annual budget of US$ 300 million. Now China is expanding its overseas reach
with China Central Television (CCTV).
The Voice of America has US$ 218
million, all from government funds.
We have Australia Plus, run by the Australian
Broadcasting Corporation with the help of Monash University, the Government of
Victoria and Swisse - a food supplement manufacturer owned by a Hong Kong-based
company.
Through this
service we give the world the WotWots.
Literally. Also Bananas in Pyjamas and
Australian Rules played by no other country apart from a hybrid in Ireland. Yet
we live in a region where projecting a positive image among the near neighbours
is particularly important as the biggest in the block don’t like us.
According to a recent survey published by the USAsia Centre Indonesians
responded to the question: Which
country has the closest relationship with President Joko Widodo’s government? by
putting Saudi Arabia first at 47 per cent, followed by China, and the US. Only
two per cent said Australia. Clearly we
have problems.
Are we
ashamed? Citizens may be, but our government is not. This is a new irresponsibility. Our presentations to the Asia Pacific used to
be different. For decades Australian governments believed that broadcasting and
telecasting into the region was an important commitment, sowing ideas,
informing and influencing.
Radio Australia
started in 1939 using shortwave, mainly to counter Japanese propaganda. After the war it became a ‘soft power
diplomacy tool’ in the jargon of foreign affairs. Other terms commonly found in
the literature include ‘globally connected’ and ‘promotion of Australian
values’.
Thousands
developed their English skills huddled over crackling sets, particularly during
the 1950s and 60s. Technology forced
changes. Satellites eclipsed land-based transmitters. Rebrands became necessary but the vision
remained and the mission expanded.
In 2006
Foreign Minister Alexander Downer announced that ABC Asia Pacific (formerly
Australia Television International) would become Australia Network, with funding from Foreign Affairs and Trade plus
advertising.
Downer said the
ABC would run the network offering “high quality programmes about Australia and
its engagement with the region.” Also promised were “extensive news and current
affairs programmes, Australian-produced education, drama, entertainment and
lifestyle programmes.”
In 2011 the
Labor Government called tenders to run Australia
Network. The two main hopefuls were
the ABC and Sky TV which had long
campaigned to get the job. When it
seemed Rupert Murdoch’s company – no friend of Labor - would get the contract
the tender process was scrapped and the job given to the ABC.
It was a short victory. After the
Liberal-National Coalition won government in 2013 revenge was rapid - Australia Network was turned off.
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said the network ‘had failed to deliver a
cost-effective vehicle’ but gave no facts to back the claim.
The then ABC managing
director Mark Scott said the decision ‘sends a strange message to the region
that the government does not want to use the most powerful communication tools available
to it to talk to our regional neighbours about Australia’.
Killing the
network may have satisfied a political ideology but a legal reality had to be
faced: The ABC Charter requires it to be an international broadcaster so the
gap had to be filled. Click onto Australia
Plus. Image polishers have called it:
…an opportunity for Australian
businesses and a case study in corporate entrepreneurship … an endeavour that
should be applauded. It is a positive step for the broadcaster, for public
institutions in general and for Australian business.
So far few corporates have clapped
because their logos have yet to appear on Indonesian screens. Absent from the sponsors are the 360
Australian businesses which launched a mighty assault on the Indonesian market
in 2015 and again this year with 120 delegates.
The new
service is believed to cost AUD $20 million a year with three ‘foundation
partners’ – in the coy language of one report – ‘signing-on to advertising
deals worth in the low single digit million dollar range’.
Presumably this means something between one and three million a year, so
still a minority contribution.
As Australian
leaders recite the mantra that Indonesia is our most important foreign
relationship it might be logical to assume we’d be offering our best and
brightest programmes selected specifically for the archipelago and other
markets.
According to
the ABC ‘the service is delivered as a single stream across all
territories. Programmes do not have separate
versions for individual territories’. So
one size fits all in the 43 countries that get Australia Plus. This negates the ABC’s claim that ‘the ABC places
the audience at the centre of everything it does’.
In Indonesia
three pay-to-use cable services carry Australia
Plus. They get it free. The ABC says it’s ‘available to three million
people in Indonesia’ meaning that’s the number who pay for access to networks
each offering 50 or more channels.
We are the
closest Western nation to Indonesia with the ability to present a different perspective
in the media jungle of Southeast Asia. Australia Plus says its mission is ‘to provide a
television and digital service that informs, entertains and inspires our
audience with an uniquely Australian perspective.’ Note the order of priorities.
Indonesian
viewers comparing Australia Plus with
other nations’ presentations might conclude that we’re a poor country offering
an inconsistent fare and indifferent to audience needs.
This situation may not concern the Government
but it appears to worry the ABC. In March this year it made an untitled
submission to the Foreign Policy White Paper. The document noted the expansion of the BBC
World Service and other TV networks into overseas telecasting while reminding
DFAT of some original principles:
Australia
requires a strategy for engagement which enhances mutual understanding and
respect and which encourages an exchange of ideas. Establishing strong cultural
and social links with international populations will facilitate stronger
economic ties and more productive collaboration.
Perhaps
this late conscience-pricker might someday get a reaction. However, so far nothing seems to stir the
major parties. They enjoy ABC and SBS excellence at home and offer heart-warming
statements about Australia being respected in the region.
If Australia’s
overseas TV is supposed to project a robust Western democracy, a creative
explorer of art and technology and a leader in education, then Australia Plus is a turn off.
It could be
a splendid showcase in Indonesia and the 42 other nations where it’s available,
spreading Australian news, culture, values and opinions, equal to its
international competitors. We have the skills and talent. What we lack is political will.
(This feature is based on a paper presented at
the Indonesia Council’s Open Conference at Flinders University this month. The full text with references can be found
here: http://indonesianow.blogspot.com.au/2017/07/australia-plus-is-minus-merit.html
First published in Asian Currents 26 July 2017. See: http://asaa.asn.au/australia-plus-minus/
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